Serena woke to the sound of hurried footsteps in the outside corridor. She imdiately knew the owner of those footsteps was coming to communicate bad news. It was the sa type of determined strides she’d grown familiar with from her ti as a captain. On many occasions, Tos or Dagon approached her quarters in the Vengeance in the sa way, always coming to inform her of a problem.
She elbowed Alia. “Get dressed,” she hissed before climbing out of bed and slipping on her instructor uniform. She barely had ti to fix her jacket when the footsteps stopped outside her door and the person behind it rapidly knocked. Judging from the aether signature, it was either Ryosuke or the grandmaster.
“A mont!” she called, then frowned realising it was unlikely her shout would be heard through Alia’s sound-blocking ward. The room brightened, and she turned to see a golden glow with hints of blue fading from Alia’s body - she had healed herself wide awake.
“Instructor Halen?” a voice sounded from beyond the door, followed by more knocking. It turned out it was Ryosuke, after all. Serena exchanged a glance with Alia. They were both confused and while Serena could keep her face neutral, Alia wore her emotions on her face as if they were the latest fashion.
Confusion. Concern. Worry.
Serena left Alia behind in the bedroom to get dressed. Exiting Alia’s sound-blocking ward, she once again called out, “One mont!”. Thankfully, that stopped Ryosuke’s knocking. The man sounded like he was seconds away from kicking the door down.
Sothing must have happened.
Serena opened the door to see the Head Instructor with a tense expression. He looked her up and down before stepping through the doorfra and looking around the room. His eyes lingered on the closed bedroom door before locking onto Serena’s.
He was carrying his weapon.
“Is Alia in there?” he asked. “I can sense so wards.”
Serena felt her tongue twist, ready to click in annoyance. She liked and respected Ryosuke, but it didn't bode well if the coming conversation regarding her and Alia’s relationship started so curt. She knew many of the instructors possessed quite traditional views when it ca to… her disposition. She’d hoped, and still hoped, that Ryosuke, who had travelled the Empire more than she had, would be more understanding.
“Yes,” she answered flatly. “What’s wrong?” As she asked the question, her mind churned. Would Ryosuke, either by himself or under the grandmaster’s orders, storm into her room, ard, in the early hours of the morning? Even if they disapproved of her activities, this wouldn’t be the ti or the place for them to bring it up.
“Has she been with you the entire night? She hasn’t left?”
The latter question prompted Serena to beco sure this wasn’t about the potential discovery of her relationship. “Yes,” she answered. “She was exhausted after training her aura, so I invited her to stay the night.” Serena crossed her arms. “Why? What’s going on, Ryosuke?”
He scratched his nose. “Is she decent? Can you fetch-” he coughed into his hand lightly. “Can you request she make herself known?” As his question finished, two more sets of footsteps could be heard, and a mont later, Ryosuke was joined by Nathaniel and Sarafina. Now, three Head Instructors were making themselves welco in her reception area.
Great. Why not invite the Empress along as well!?
“We’ve woken the staff,” Nathaniel said. “Aethergram sent to the Old Guard. Periter guards were notified. They’re on the way.”
“Alia here?” Sarafina intoned smoothly, nodding her head towards the bedroom.
“Coming!” Alia's voice sounded from beyond the door as the sound-blocking ward dropped. The door opened, and Alia stepped through with a nervous smile and a small wave. She was wearing her uniform and - no doubt through a dash of spellwork - had it and herself looking pristine. With how she presented, no one would believe that less than a minute ago, she’d been fast asleep in Serena’s bed.
That is if she hadn’t forgotten to put on her shoes.
This idiot!
“Hello, you three!” Alia chirped.
Serena eyed their reactions to Alia closely. With relief, she noted their expressions softened upon seeing Alia. Whatever Alia was involved in, it hadn’t caused hostile intentions to form between her and the staff.
“Alia,” Sarafina said softly. “Where were you approximately an hour ago?”
“Uh,” Alia rubbed the back of her neck. “Here. Sleeping.”
“Sleeping?” Sarafina questioned. “Since when?”
“Mmm…” Alia placed a finger on her chin. “Midnight?”
“You shared Instructor Halen’s quarters?” Nathaniel asked, a frown forming on his face.
“She’s been helping with my aura in the evenings and early mornings,” Alia said, shrugging nonchalantly. “It’s easier to stay the night than walk back and forth.”
“Have you used any of your healing magic tonight?” Sarafina asked. “Especially recently?”
“Only on myself,” Alia answered. “To wake up.”
The trio of instructors threw each other glances. Ryosuke’s eyes narrowed while Nathaniel and Sarafina looked confused. Serena loudly clicked her tongue, forcing the room's attention on her. She dropped her neutral expression, allowing her growing anger to show.
“Enough questions,” she stated, folding her arms and tapping her foot. “I’m not accustod to having ard Speakers barge into my quarters day or night. Alia has been with the entire night. I state that on my honour and na. So, tell , what the fuck’s going on?”
Surprisingly, none of the three took offence to her directness. Ryosuke even bowed in apology. Straightening up, he gave one final glance towards Alia before explaining, “Second-year lanie Mori was found unconscious in Alia’s quarters an hour ago. Lunaria found her after detecting an unusual amount of aether that indicated a fight.” Ryosuke raised a hand, cutting off Alia, who’d begun to interrupt. “Miss Mori is alive and well. She’s only suffering from a small amount of aether exhaustion. Lunaria has her under a sleep spell currently. We’re interested in Alia's whereabouts and spellwork because while Miss Mori’s clothes show signs of being attacked by a blade, her body is spotless from both injury and dirt - signs we’ve co to understand are typical of Alia’s healing and cleaning magic.”
“She was attacked!?” Alia blurted out.
“Who attacked her?” Serena asked, locking eyes with Ryosuke, demanding his attention.
“An ochimusha,” Sarafina jumped in.
Serena hissed, feeling her eyes widen with surprise.
An ochimusha!? Here!?
“Now dead,” Sarafina continued. “His body is in Alia’s room. Strangely, it looks like he died from aether exhaustion, which has us all puzzled. He entered through the window and certainly engaged in so kind of fight with Miss Mori. Only…”
“Only… defeating an ochimusha would be beyond l,” Serena finished the sentence. The term ochimusha referred to an honourless warrior who had fallen into a dishonest and criminal lifestyle. They were assassins, thieves, and pirates. Above all, they were dangerous. Beyond the capabilities of an average trainee officer.
“That’s right,” Ryosuke affird. “Judging by the symptoms of aether exhaustion, Lunaria reckons the man’s aura bordered on yellow, if not already there. Miss Mori was verging on orange - not a close match. Her aura wouldn’t have protected her against his attacks, and his weapons looked poisoned. As I said, Miss Mori’s body is unhard, but her clothes carry the signs of being subject to cuts and stabs.”
Simultaneously, all three instructors turned towards Alia. The unspoken implication lay heavy in the air. Although Serena was confident Alia hadn’t left her sight or arms for even a minute tonight, she couldn’t help but raise a questioning eyebrow.
“Don’t look at ,” Alia crossed her arms and tapped her bare feet. “It wasn’t , and if it was, I wouldn’t try and hide it! l’s okay, then? I’ll go and visit her!” She took a step towards the door.
“You should stay here for now,” Ryosuke said.
“Oh?” Alia’s tone darkened. “I don’t rember asking. If you think any of you are going to keep from visiting an unconscious friend, then I suggest you think again! Hmph!” She put her hands on her hips and gave the group a half-decent glare. Had she been practising?
Ryosuke’s jaw clenched, but Sarafina’s giggle quickly lightened the atmosphere.
“My, the shawa has so claws, hasn’t she, Ryosuke?” Sarafina intoned. “No one here has any legal right to restrict your movents, dear Alia, nor would we want to. With an ochimusha lying dead in your quarters with you unaccounted for, finding and protecting you - the obvious target - is a priority. Who knows if whoever sent that assassin sent others?”
“This happened an hour ago?” Serena asked.
“Yes.”
“And it took you an hour to co here?” It didn’t quite add up. If Alia was determined to be the primary target of a potential assassin, Serena should have been woken up long ago.
“Well, after Lunaria secured Alia’s quarters, she beca so interested in the residue aether that she forgot to raise the alarm. Sothing about the fight caught her attention.” Sarafina shrugged. “She isn’t called the Aether Addict for nothing.”
Right. There was more than one type of idiot in the academy.
“What about the students?” Serena asked.
“Conducting head counts as we speak,” Nathaniel offered. “Got half the staff searching the buildings and grounds. No one has sensed any unusual aether activity and you two are fine, so it looks like a single assassin. We’re trying to keep things quiet, for now at least.”
“Not the kind of thing we can just sweep under the rug,” Serena said. An ochimusha trying to assassinate a now famous staff mber of a prestigious academy would inevitably leak, no matter how hard the grandmaster or Greatlord Oshiro wanted to keep it down.
“Right,” Nathaniel said. “We’ve sent an aethergram to the Old Guard. Officially reported it. They’ll likely be turning up within the hour.”
Ryosuke chuckled, now appearing more relaxed. “Old Oshiro’s probably going to be woken up over this. He might co down himself. Can you imagine the argunt if he and the Grandmaster get into a shouting match? Bet they’re going to bla each other for this.”
“Speaking of,” Serena pointed out. “Has the Grandmaster been notified?”
“Yes,” Nathaniel said. “He’s at the scene.”
Serena could see Alia was practically hopping between her feet. Despite the seriousness of the situation, it was quite adorable. The woman was determined to go and see l but also desperately held herself back so as not to cause any further problems.
“Let’s head there together,” Serena said. “Alia, put so shoes on.” She turned to the three instructors as Alia vanished into the bedroom. “The best place to protect Alia is the place that’s next to Lunaria and the Grandmaster,” she explained. Not only that but on the unlikely chance the assassin had been contracted to kill l, then the safest place for l would be near Alia.
As they walked through the main building, Serena was occupied with one burning question: Who would be stupid enough to try and kill Alia with an assassin capable of only yellow aura? Alia was a known Speaker, and anyone with any talent who’d spent enough ti around her would get so sense of the dense layers of wards she always kept up.
They exited the main building and began walking the pathway to the magic tower. Throughout the grounds, pairs of guards and other staff carried aetherlights as they scoured the area for anything unusual. If another assassin were sowhere, they would undoubtedly abandon any further action. With the entire academy now alert, it would be suicidal to try anything.
Entering the magic tower, they travelled nearly to the top, stepping off on the floor where Alia’s quarters were located. There, Kenji Tanaka and a handful of other staff stood guard. As they passed, Ryosuke whispered, “How is he?” and Kenji made an expression that read tread-lightly.
Stepping inside, Serena realised this was the first ti she’d ever been in Alia’s quarters. She couldn’t help but note that Alia had gotten better anities than she had. What kind of favouritism was Lunaria operating on?
The woman in question, the Head of the Departnt of Aether, was sitting in a chair, buzzing with aether. Casting her perception around, Serena identified layers of privacy wards surrounding the room. Lunaria was also maintaining a sleep spell over the unconscious l, who was lying on a table with a folded blanket slotted underneath her head.
She sensed the aether signature of the grandmaster from Alia’s bedroom. Presumably, that was where the body of the would-be assassin was. For now, Serena would focus on l, who was being looked over by Emalina Honda, the Head of dical and Battlefield Care.
Alia rushed past, bouncing up to the sleeping l. Her movent caused Emalina to turn and ask pointedly, “Did you heal her? She’s in perfect condition, other than a dash of aether exhaustion, which doesn’t look like the result of anything more than a slightly intense training session.”
Alia shook her head. Serena added, “I can vouch it wasn’t her”.
Emalina looked between the two before turning to look at Ryosuke, who nodded back. The demon sighed, saying, “Well, soone healed this girl!”
“Are you sure she was healed?” Serena asked. She had to be honest, l did look, well, Aliafied. She had that clean, healthy look that Serena was now used to seeing in the mirror after Alia had cast her healing and cleaning spells on her. Serena turned and asked Lunaria, “Did you detect any healing magic?”
“Admittedly, no,” answered the Head Instructor. “But I felt the aether signatures of two warriors fighting. They fought, and sohow, this one…” Lunaria gestured towards l’s sleeping figure. “...Won.”
“Look here,” Emalina said, prompting Alia’s and Serena’s attention as she turned l to the side. “Stab wounds in the shoulder here and here,” she finished by pointing towards the slit in the clothes around l’s lower back. “She was struck by an aura-enhanced blade in the stomach; you can see where the fibres have darkened slightly from the heat.” Emalina then motioned towards l’s left leg, where there was large cut in the clothes covering her lower leg. “Sa thing here,” Emalina explained. “Only, look how deep the cut would have had to be to cut the clothes like it this. The intruder nearly took her entire leg off!”
“But she’s been healed,” Serena muttered.
“And cleaned,” Emalina pointed out. “She hasn’t got a drop of blood on her or her clothes, but the body of the intruder does have her blood on. At least, we think it’s Miss Mori’s blood. We’ll have to send it for testing first and see if the blood types differ.”
“What kinds of injuries has the ochimusha got?” Serena asked.
“None that produce blood,” Emalina said with a shrug. “I’ll have to do an autopsy to be sure, but I’ll need permission from the Old Guard first. I’ve only examined him briefly, but it looks like he died from pure aether exhaustion, which doesn’t make much sense.” Emaline nodded her head in the direction of the bedroom. “Doesn’t look like so great fight went on, so how did he die of exhaustion?”
Serena couldn’t help but agree. If the assassin was engaged in a conflict that taxed him to the point of dying from aether exhaustion, then the room should show signs of an intense battle - collapsed walls and the like. From what she could see, that didn’t fit the physical evidence.
“This healing…” Alia spoke up. She’d been watching l quietly with a solemn expression for a while, but now she seed to have found her voice again. “Perhaps the assassin fought with the sa person who healed l? And that person overwheld him so much he died from aether exhaustion?”
“Assuming it wasn’t you,” Emalina said. “Not that I don’t believe you, of course,” she added quickly, seeing Serena’s glare. “Lunaria didn’t detect that level of fighting, did you?”
“No,” Lunaria added, shaking her head. “Which ans another healer, one that is certainly human and likely with extensive cloaking capabilities good enough to fool , was sohow involved and ca to Miss Mori’s aid. It would have to have been a very talented Speaker. Perhaps a dual-Speaker with a focus on Kanaxai or similar.” She chewed the tip of her thumb before turning to Alia. “You swear true? That this was not you? You would not be in any trouble, either with us or the law, if you killed this man.”
“I swear!” Alia puffed her chest out. “On my na and honour! I was asleep the entire night! In Serena’s-” Alia coughed quickly. “-Quarters.”
“Oh?” Lunaria raised an inquisitive eyebrow.
Resisting a sigh, Serena explained she was helping Alia train in the evenings and early mornings and how she would invite her to stay to save walking back and forth between the main building and the magic tower. It wasn’t technically a lie; it would pass the test of an axiom crystal. It just slightly avoided what they got up to between those two training periods.
Serena was sure that once things had settled down, so of the instructors might begin to construct… theories, especially the three who had seen Alia exit Serena’s bedroom barefoot. For now, at least, they had bigger fish to catch.
“In that case…” Lunaria murmured. “I’ll keep my thoughts to myself. I fear if I vocalise the few theories I have that fit with the facts, you’ll cart off to the asylum for madness. Ha!”
This prompted a few titters from the instructors in the room, but in their eyes, Serena could see they were having similar thoughts. Where could she even begin with this? As far as she knew, the nearest human healer that wasn’t Alia was thousands of klicks away on the human continent! To the best of her knowledge, the only human healer both friendly and powerful enough to do what was described, was already here in this room! And that healer was adamant it wasn’t her!
Could it have been a demon? As the thought ford, Serena was already pushing it out of her head. Demonkind had no gods of healing, and no demon have ever communed with Aseco. Neither had any demon ever developed enough communion to form even the first-circle healing spells.
The worst part was that Serena knew Alia wasn’t lying. She had known the woman long enough to understand how difficult it was for her to lie about anything. It was both a blessing and a curse and that especially held true tonight. It was a blessing to have Alia not be involved, and also a curse that she wasn’t because it ant there was soone else with powerful healing abilities that could hide themselves from Lunaria’s perception.
Had another ridiculous existence like Alia popped up? Was there another powerful healer sohow friendly to demonkind? Was there so kind of hidden talent that Centralis Intelligent had pulled out?
“I’m going to check on the other body,” Serena said, turning to Alia. “Are you okay?”
“Mmm!” Alia nodded, although with forced enthusiasm. “I’m happy to see l’s okay!”
“You can heal her when we wake her up,” Lunaria intoned from her chair. “Not that she needs it, as you can tell. Just don’t do it now - the feeling of aether exhaustion might help her rember the fight.”
“Back soon,” Serena declared, standing up. Nathaniel left the room while Ryosuke and Sarafina were going over so papers. Judging by their comnts, it was the results of the student headcounts and searches. “Anything unusual?” she asked as she passed.
They both shook their heads.
Serena stepped into Alia’s bedroom. It was well-lit; the aetherlights had been turned up fully. Lying on Alia’s bed was the corpse of the ochimusha. Standing against one wall was the grandmaster. He was watching the dead body with cold eyes, almost as unmoving as the corpse on the bed.
She gave the dead ochimusha a look over. He was an assassin, alright. He wore dark, well-fitted clothing so it wouldn’t catch on any thorns or brambles. He wore no shoes; his aura would have protected him against anything he could step on, so he would have favoured the extra feedback through his bare feet. His weapon of choice was a steel knife, its deadly blade now lying harmless next to him. There was blood on the blade, as well as sothing else. Serena leaned closer to examine it.
“Poison,” the grandmaster growled. “Careful.”
“Right,” Serena nodded. She could see the sticky resin coat. If this was the blade that cut l, then it was even more evidence she was covertly saved and healed. Furthermore, Serena wasn’t an expert tracker or hunter, but she knew enough to determine that the ochimusha’s placent on Alia’s bed wasn’t congruent with l’s blood trail. Soone had placed him here after he was dead.
“Manwese,” the grandmaster stated. “Perhaps from Tanhae, judging by the base of his horns. No one here recognises him, so he probably isn’t nad. Once the Old Guard get here, I’ll get copies of the photographs they take and see if anyone in my brother’s circle knows who this is.”
“We’re passing the investigation onto them, then?” Serena asked. Considering the Speakers involved and the fact the cri happened on the grounds of what was technically a military establishnt, the grandmaster have the authority to take charge himself.
“Oh, we’ll do our investigation, but on paper, it’ll be them,” he said, raising a fist and squeezing it tight. “The Old Guard handle the periter security, which ans this bastard slipped through their net. I’ll bring the seven hells onto them for this failure.” His eyes darkened and sohow beca even more cold. “If the girl had died, I would’ve taken their heads.”
He wasn’t joking.
“Do we know it was the window?” Serena asked.
“Mmm,” ca the grumbled response. “Lockpicking marks on the lock.” The grandmaster finally moved, walking past Serena and closing the door. A burst of aether erupted from Lunaria, and Serena experienced the now-familiar sensation of being in a room wrapped in a sound-blocking spell. Now, it was just the pair of them.
And a corpse.
“Instructor Halen,” he intoned, his presence filling the entire room. “Do you know anything about this? Is this Thornheart’s work?” He glared at her, and Serena could swear she could feel herself shrinking under his gaze. She thought she had a weighty stare, but this was sothing else.
“No,” she answered. “It’s not. I know this.”
“How do you know?”
“Because I know her. I know when she’s lying, and she’s not lying. She’d testify to this under an axiom crystal, as would I.”
“Hmm…” the grandmaster rubbed his chin. The pressure in the room eased. “Know any likely suspects? People with the ans and motive to order this?”
“Any high-ranking mber of the human clergy?” Serena offered with a shrug. “A Northern fanatic? This could be the work of a hundred different organisations. The list of possible suspects might be thousands. To be honest…” She sighed. “I thought sothing like this might have happened sooner rather than later.”
The grandmaster took a mont to reply. “This doesn’t feel like a particularly sophisticated attempt. An honourless warrior against a Speaker? Madness. Madness and stupidity.” He shook his head. “Human groups wouldn’t waste an ochimusha on a half-hearted attempt like this. This ca from a demon, but that hardly narrows the list.”
“Maybe…” It was worth a shot. “Darkblades?” Serena suggested. “They’re both mad and stupid.” Even as she said it, she didn’t really believe it. She fully expected that, at so point, the Darkblades would try and assassinate Alia. They’d had more than a few discussions around the subject. But this? It felt sloppy. Amateurish. Like so spoilt rich boy had thrown money at a problem he had no idea-
Could it be?
“There… is one person,” Serena tentatively began, a mory from her ti in Kenhoro slowly surfacing. “A Lord-Prospect Jin. I never found out his first na. He was a snarky, stuck-up brat with too much money who would never be sanctioned with full lordship but still liked his friends calling him Lord. That kind of man. I, Alia, and an intelligence officer called Aiden Adachi encountered him in a Kenhoro restaurant for the moonrain festival.” She placed a finger to her temple, closing her eyes, trying to rember the events. It was tricky - she’d been drunk at the ti.
“He was a sixhorn. Three pairs. Long braided dark hair. He had a group with him. Four to six people. Similar appearance less the horns. He pulled his sword against Alia. I stepped in and gave them all a beating.” Serena decided she wouldn’t ntion that the primary motivation for her actions was Alia’s promise that if she could get them all unconscious within five seconds, she would agree to anything Serena requested when they were alone in bed.
She’d greatly profited from that deal.
“There’s probably more than a dozen Lord-Prospect Jins walking about Kenhoro and Tanhae…” The grandmaster took a slow breath. “But not a lot of sixhorns. My brother would know who that is. You think this Lord-Prospect Jin is the type?”
“For this?” Serena gestured towards the corpse. “Young, brash, stupid… unable to drop a grudge, too scared to get revenge against House Halen directly, so he blas everything on the human… it’s possible. At the very least, the stupidity fits.”
“Stupid indeed. He’ll hang for this.” He nodded towards the door. “I’d like to bring Thornheart in to discuss this incident. Then, we’ll wake the girl up and see what she rembers. When the Old Guard co and make a ss of everything, don’t ntion this Lord-Prospect in any statents. We’ll ask Thornheart to do the sa.”
“They’re that incompetent?” Serena asked. She knew there was so bad blood between the Old Guard and the military, but didn’t know it extended all the way up towards figures as important as the grandmaster.
The demon shook his head. “It’s not so much as incompetence; rather, the hacks have so many contacts on the inside they’ll end up leaking everything, whether intentionally or accidentally. We’ll do our own investigation before this Lord-Prospect finds out he’s a suspect from a broadsheet headline.” He faced Serena. “It’ll be a long night. They love taking photographs of everything and speaking to everyone multiple tis. I also need you to complete an incident report for military records.”
Right. Of course. Paperwork. Serena’s ti in the military had caused her to learn there were three things guaranteed in life: death, taxes, and the inordinate amount of paperwork you had to fill out when anything interesting happened.
Letting a small sigh escape, she joined the grandmaster in returning to the reception room, where a long night awaited them.
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